They are looking for someone with 10+ years experience who wants to move into management and/or lead a team, then they can hire everyone else. Only problem is that the person with 10+ years experience will only work as a contractor/freelancer and anyone else who wants to move into management has already done so.
You haven't seen a flock of seagulls collapse into a singularity when someone throws bits of tasty food up into the air. Quite entertaining when you are high-school kids on a school trip to the coast.
Convert those into barcodes and put them on street signs using invisible ink. Conspiracy theory nuts used to think the maintenance bar codes at the back of street signs were some kind of geo-location code for the army to take people to the nearest FEMA camps when GPS wasn't working.
There are also Gray Codes - normally those are used for weather vanes and anything that rotates and needs to avoid errors due to signal nose.. In theory, you could have a global coordinate system using these. The Manhattan distance between two coordinate is simply the number of bits that change, but if you want accurate distance, the regular GPS coordinates are better.
UK has 7 digit post codes. These identify a small area, such as a block of apartments or row of houses, but you still need to specify the building number. There also seems to be a competition to build the narrowest building which is around 1.5 meters. Though I've seen outbuildings at the back of houses in a terraced street converted into separate units. They only have a doorway at the front of the street with an access corridor going to the property at the back. So you would need to increase accuracy to 1 meter if a drone were to deliver a parcel to the front door.
The business was based on the model that college or high-school students could earn a bit of cash working part time or during the holidays. They weren't meant to become the one-company town employer.
I've seen that as well. For the past 20 years, I've been to job interviews where the companies give out programming tests and explain it is because the graduates coming out of the universities don't know what pointers are, how to implement linked lists or even how C++ destructors. They then require that various positions require a degree in medical imaging or fluid dynamics.
I've moved my Windows 10 install onto a VM for the very same reason. I'm fed up of it "suiciding" itself with an update that leaves either a black screen or a blue window logo. Apparently, it can't do a shutdown and reboot by itself so requires the VM manager to do that. At least this way, it only disables itself and not GRUB bootloader or any other Linux partitions.
Even with playing games, I'll settle down to play a title I haven't played for months, and then find that I can do that because there's a new update that requires several hundred megabytes of binary download. Then the DirectX drivers need to be updated and reinstalled.
Even smart TV's do that - I bought a Toshiba 48" 3D TV which was being sold at $300 as part of a promotion. It worked perfectly as I could watch 3D moves on Youtube, but then it got completely *****'ed up with an update from Toshiba. Disabled the ability to be used as a computer monitor as well as the ability to watch 3D movies.
Shhh. Don't give them ideas. They'll throw the book at you and fine you for littering, operating a flying vehicle without a license, without insurance, while intoxicated and failing to maintain an aircraft in airworthy condition.
Then there are arguments on whether employeenum should be int,unsigned int or even uint8_t, whether the coding standard should be EmployeeNum, employee_num, or employeeNum.
From the "Get Smart" secret spy series. For office discussions that were of the highest security classification, the solution was simple - plastic bubbles. Next best thing to SSL encryption.
I would say the categories can be extended to: smart TV, smartphone, tablet, netbook, office workstation, gaming laptop/desktop PC, rack-mounted servers, PC server, engineering laptop/desktop PC.
Even the smartphones and tablets are more powerful than a early gaming console like an Ultra 64/Playstation 3. A gaming PC is more powerful than an office "workstation" with multi-screens, SLI cards. Engineering workstations can have dual-socket boards with quad-SLI boards and 40+ core XEON chips.
It's not just ARM. There are lots of startups coming up with various chips to do face and emotion recognition, posture recognition, motion recognition and all sorts of basic vision processing that would form a single visual circuit in a mammalian brain. These are being designed using machine learning techniques and don't require the double/floating point precision processing that are typically supplied by Intel chips. Even the fluid dynamics people were realizing that machine learning techniques were helping to make simulations more accurate while not requiring double-point precision.
In my undergraduate course, we started out with around 30 students. It was known at the time at that department, that in any course, around 2 students drop out each year. This happened each year for 4+ years. They wouldn't turn up for tutorial/lab sessions, miss lectures, spend more time at the student union drinking/gaming at the pool tables or the library when they should have been doing courseworks.
Our university for legal reasons, kept a role call for every lecture and tutorial session. Other universities that used huge lecture halls didn't bother.
It should be easy to use "traceroute" to find the route between a Comcast customer IP address and Tutanota's servers. Wherever it happens, the guilty party could have been dropping the received or transmitted packets from the servers. Traffic seems to go out to the USA via Hurricane Electric and then to Tutanota.
Some of us saw what happened people resisted advancements in technology; the Wapping Street dispute were the print unions had resisted digitalization of the printing presses and found their jobs vapourized overnight. One minute there were entire printshops working with copperplate presses. Next minute the journalists were typing in the stories and doing the layout on a WYSIWYG workstation. I've seen workplaces with low manager/worker ratios (as low as 1:3) flattened as the paperless office removed bureaucracy.
We've seen bank branches disappear as everyone is forced or has moved to online banking. High streets shops disappear for the same reason. Demand for skills in particular programming languages go up and down like global market stock prices.
Going by the tunneling work in London, once you have one of those tunnel boring machine underground, they can excavate and line with concrete 500 meters of tunnel each day using just 20 people.
Most of the station will burn up, but it's those spherical hydrazine fuel tanks which are the things that make it to the ground. Basically turning the planet into a giant wheel. I wonder if anyone is taking bets on the coordinates of those coordinates.
They are related now. By using perturbation theory to predict the motion of planets around stars, after some calculus integration, they recovered the Schrodinger equation. It's like having two sides of science separated by a fog cloud and suddenly finding the two connected. Then they find out that quantum size ball lightning is caused by Shankar skyrmions, which were a theoretical 3D topological shape of magnetic fields but now proved to be real.
It really depends on tax policies. In the UK, every business is taxed on how many strands of fibre-optic cable they have in use and how many kilometers long they are. That's pushed companies to implement faster bit-rates and multiple-wavelength technologies to get as much capacity out of a single strand as possible while there is still lots of dark fibre out there.
Train networks in the UK do something similar. They are now moving to the point of increasing capacity by getting smaller train services formed by a couple of carriages to "join up" to form a larger train when going across busy lines, then they split up again. The only hazard is that you have to know which carriages are going where (carriages A to D go to the coastal town, E to H continue onto the next city).
They are looking for someone with 10+ years experience who wants to move into management and/or lead a team, then they can hire everyone else. Only problem is that the person with 10+ years experience will only work as a contractor/freelancer and anyone else who wants to move into management has already done so.
You haven't seen a flock of seagulls collapse into a singularity when someone throws bits of tasty food up into the air. Quite entertaining when you are high-school kids on a school trip to the coast.
Convert those into barcodes and put them on street signs using invisible ink. Conspiracy theory nuts used to think the maintenance bar codes at the back of street signs were some kind of geo-location code for the army to take people to the nearest FEMA camps when GPS wasn't working.
There are also Gray Codes - normally those are used for weather vanes and anything that rotates and needs to avoid errors due to signal nose.. In theory, you could have a global coordinate system using these. The Manhattan distance between two coordinate is simply the number of bits that change, but if you want accurate distance, the regular GPS coordinates are better.
UK has 7 digit post codes. These identify a small area, such as a block of apartments or row of houses, but you still need to specify the building number. There also seems to be a competition to build the narrowest building which is around 1.5 meters. Though I've seen outbuildings at the back of houses in a terraced street converted into separate units. They only have a doorway at the front of the street with an access corridor going to the property at the back. So you would need to increase accuracy to 1 meter if a drone were to deliver a parcel to the front door.
The business was based on the model that college or high-school students could earn a bit of cash working part time or during the holidays. They weren't meant to become the one-company town employer.
I've seen that as well. For the past 20 years, I've been to job interviews where the companies give out programming tests and explain it is because the graduates coming out of the universities don't know what pointers are, how to implement linked lists or even how C++ destructors. They then require that various positions require a degree in medical imaging or fluid dynamics.
I've moved my Windows 10 install onto a VM for the very same reason. I'm fed up of it "suiciding" itself with an update that leaves either a black screen or a blue window logo. Apparently, it can't do a shutdown and reboot by itself so requires the VM manager to do that. At least this way, it only disables itself and not GRUB bootloader or any other Linux partitions.
Even with playing games, I'll settle down to play a title I haven't played for months, and then find that I can do that because there's a new update that requires several hundred megabytes of binary download. Then the DirectX drivers need to be updated and reinstalled.
Even smart TV's do that - I bought a Toshiba 48" 3D TV which was being sold at $300 as part of a promotion. It worked perfectly as I could watch 3D moves on Youtube, but then it got completely *****'ed up with an update from Toshiba. Disabled the ability to be used as a computer monitor as well as the ability to watch 3D movies.
Shhh. Don't give them ideas. They'll throw the book at you and fine you for littering, operating a flying vehicle without a license, without insurance, while intoxicated and failing to maintain an aircraft in airworthy condition.
Then there are arguments on whether employeenum should be int,unsigned int or even uint8_t, whether the coding standard should be EmployeeNum, employee_num, or employeeNum.
From the "Get Smart" secret spy series. For office discussions that were of the highest security classification, the solution was simple - plastic bubbles. Next best thing to SSL encryption.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
https://blogsitestudio.com/wp-...
I would say the categories can be extended to:
smart TV, smartphone, tablet, netbook, office workstation, gaming laptop/desktop PC, rack-mounted servers, PC server, engineering laptop/desktop PC.
Even the smartphones and tablets are more powerful than a early gaming console like an Ultra 64/Playstation 3. A gaming PC is more powerful than an office "workstation" with multi-screens, SLI cards. Engineering workstations can have dual-socket boards with quad-SLI boards and 40+ core XEON chips.
It's not just ARM. There are lots of startups coming up with various chips to do face and emotion recognition, posture recognition, motion recognition and all sorts of basic vision processing that would form a single visual circuit in a mammalian brain. These are being designed using machine learning techniques and don't require the double/floating point precision processing that are typically supplied by Intel chips. Even the fluid dynamics people were realizing that machine learning techniques were helping to make simulations more accurate while not requiring double-point precision.
In my undergraduate course, we started out with around 30 students. It was known at the time at that department, that in any course, around 2 students drop out each year. This happened each year for 4+ years. They wouldn't turn up for tutorial/lab sessions, miss lectures, spend more time at the student union drinking/gaming at the pool tables or the library when they should have been doing courseworks.
Our university for legal reasons, kept a role call for every lecture and tutorial session. Other universities that used huge lecture halls didn't bother.
It should be easy to use "traceroute" to find the route between a Comcast customer IP address and Tutanota's servers. Wherever it happens, the guilty party could have been dropping the received or transmitted packets from the servers. Traffic seems to go out to the USA via Hurricane Electric and then to Tutanota.
They don't want the overhead of having to support multiple versions of hardware and ending up like the PC market.
Some of us saw what happened people resisted advancements in technology; the Wapping Street dispute were the print unions had resisted digitalization of the printing presses and found their jobs vapourized overnight. One minute there were entire printshops working with copperplate presses. Next minute the journalists were typing in the stories and doing the layout on a WYSIWYG workstation. I've seen workplaces with low manager/worker ratios (as low as 1:3) flattened as the paperless office removed bureaucracy.
We've seen bank branches disappear as everyone is forced or has moved to online banking. High streets shops disappear for the same reason. Demand for skills in particular programming languages go up and down like global market stock prices.
Going by the tunneling work in London, once you have one of those tunnel boring machine underground, they can excavate and line with concrete 500 meters of tunnel each day using just 20 people.
http://www.crossrail.co.uk/con...
It would be easier just to build a spiral ramp or freeway spur that goes underground and have the cars drive down to tunnel level.
So it's OK if stars have their rotation axii aligned together:
http://www.cea.fr/english/Page...
Then galaxies seemed to be aligned with their rotation axii as well:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1308.281...
Same with quasars billions of light-years apart:
https://futurism.com/rotationa...
Gravity can pull objects together, but it takes electromagnetism to get them to align together.
That would suggest electric fields and currents.
Most of the station will burn up, but it's those spherical hydrazine fuel tanks which are the things that make it to the ground. Basically turning the planet into a giant wheel. I wonder if anyone is taking bets on the coordinates of those coordinates.
They are related now. By using perturbation theory to predict the motion of planets around stars, after some calculus integration, they recovered the Schrodinger equation. It's like having two sides of science separated by a fog cloud and suddenly finding the two connected. Then they find out that quantum size ball lightning is caused by Shankar skyrmions, which were a theoretical 3D topological shape of magnetic fields but now proved to be real.
It really depends on tax policies. In the UK, every business is taxed on how many strands of fibre-optic cable they have in use and how many kilometers long they are. That's pushed companies to implement faster bit-rates and multiple-wavelength technologies to get as much capacity out of a single strand as possible while there is still lots of dark fibre out there.
http://app.voa.gov.uk/corporat...
https://www.ispreview.co.uk/in...
Thats the way the London Underground network started out. The first two tunnels built were a pedestrian and narrow gauge tunnels built in the 1870's.
Once those were built, then everyone figured out what they actually needed; better ventilation, lighting, large trains and signalling.
Train networks in the UK do something similar. They are now moving to the point of increasing capacity by getting smaller train services formed by a couple of carriages to "join up" to form a larger train when going across busy lines, then they split up again. The only hazard is that you have to know which carriages are going where (carriages A to D go to the coastal town, E to H continue onto the next city).